Henrik Lundqvist said he is aware that Martin Brodeur had told The Post’s Steve Serby that the Devils’ goaltender had incorporated the way the King positions his gloves on shootouts and breakaways into a different part of his own game.

“I think Marty’s ability to adapt and be open-minded about the game is a large part of the reason he’s stayed in the league for so long and at such a high level,” Lundqvist told The Post following his team’s morning skate in advance of Monday’s Game 1 between the Rangers and Devils in the Eastern Conference finals.

“The game changes, I think it’s changed a lot from my first year in the league [2005-06], so I can only imagine how many changes there have been since Marty has been playing [since 1993-94].”

Lundqvist said he began to watch NHL goaltenders for pointers when he was 16 or 17 years old in Sweden.

“I looked so see what I could learn and then I’ve tried to be as open-minded as possible since I’ve been here,” said Lundqvist, who has allowed two goals or fewer in 10 of his 14 starts and brings a 1.68 GAA and .937 save pct. into Game 1 of the conference final.

“My first year in the NHL, there wasn’t as much emphasis on going to the front and crowding the net to score goals as there is now, so I’ve had to change my style a little bit to adjust to that,” the Rangers goalie said.

Brodeur’s style is unique. Once during the season, after a game in Pittsburgh during which Lundqvist had made perhaps the first two-pad stack save of his career, he laughed about how that stop probably made him resemble Brodeur.

“The one thing I try and pick up from Marty is the way he handles the puck,” Lundqvist said. “Not in firing it, but in putting into good areas of the ice.”

Saving defensemen from absorbing blows behind the net is one of the great benefits of having a goaltender who has the ability to get out and move the puck. The post-lockout implementation of the trapezoid behind the goal line has diminished Brodeur’s ability to make an impact playing the puck, though that was a factor against the Flyers.

“I guess that is bad for him,” Lundqvist, whose puck-handling skills have improved the last couple of years to average, said before beginning to chuckle.

“But the trapezoid is good for me, because it gives me less chance to play the puck.”